In patients with chronic pruritus of the vulva, subcutaneous
injection of the vulva with a fluorinated cortisone preparation will
often relieve the patient and break the vicious cycle of itching, scratching,
excoriation, and irritation of cutaneous nerves. Pruritus of the vulva
is often associated with parakeratosis that does not allow steroid
cream to penetrate the skin and reach the important subdermal area.
The injection must cover the entire vulva. Particular attention must
be given to those areas that the patient designates as especially troublesome.

Physiologic Changes. Pruritus of the vulva is eliminated.
Cortisone reduces the inflammatory reaction and improves the vascular
supply and thus improves the nutrition of the vulvar skin.

Points of Caution. Care must be exercised
to inject the entire vulva and to avoid penetration of the perineal
branches of the pudendal artery and vein.

Technique

With the patient under general or local anesthesia
in the lithotomy position, the surgeon outlines the inflamed areas
of the vulva.

Innervation of the vulva including the
ilioinguinal nerves, the genital branch of the genitofemoral
nerve, the perineal branch of the posterior femoral cutaneous
nerve, and the perineal branches of the pudendal nerve is shown.

Forty mg of a fluorinated steroid
solution in a 20-mL syringe mixed with 1 mL of Xylocaine are
injected in a radial design underneath the squamous epithelium.
The entire area affected is covered.